
The IX European Individual Chess Championship is taking place in Plovdiv, Bulgaria,
from April 21st to May 3rd 2008, with one free day, on Monday, April 28. The
tournament halls are in the Novotel Plovdiv. The championship is an 11 round
Swiss, playing time is 90 minutes for 40 moves plus 30 minutes for the rest
of the game with an increment of 30 seconds per move, starting from move one.
The total prize fund in the men's section is 92,200 EUR (first 15,000, 2nd 10,000,
third 8,000, fourth 6,500, fifth 5,500 etc.) and in the women's section 34,500
EUR (first 6,000, second 5,000, third 4,000, fourth 3,000, fifth 2,000, etc.).
According to Bulgarian law all prizes are taxable (10%).
Round six report
After six rounds of the European Individual Championship Sergei Movsesian has
caught up with Emil Sutovsky, both having conceded just one draw so far. They
will be playing each other on Sunday in round seven. Half a point behind the
leading pair there are three players, and then 21 with 4.5/5.
Top standings after six rounds (total 337 players)
1 |
GM Movsesian Sergei |
2695 |
SVK |
5.5 |
2 |
GM Sutovsky Emil |
2630 |
ISR |
5.5 |
3 |
GM Mamedov Rauf |
2617 |
AZE |
5.0 |
4 |
GM Tregubov Pavel V |
2629 |
RUS |
5.0 |
5 |
GM Pantsulaia Levan |
2617 |
GEO |
5.0 |
6 |
GM Volkov Sergey |
2633 |
RUS |
4.5 |
7 |
GM Stevic Hrvoje |
2571 |
CRO |
4.5 |
8 |
GM Werle Jan |
2581 |
NED |
4.5 |
9 |
GM Macieja Bartlomiej |
2599 |
POL |
4.5 |
10 |
GM Berg Emanuel |
2601 |
SWE |
4.5 |
11 |
GM Iotov Valentin |
2531 |
BUL |
4.5 |
12 |
GM Efimenko Zahar |
2660 |
UKR |
4.5 |
13 |
GM Kurnosov Igor |
2593 |
RUS |
4.5 |
14 |
GM Kovacevic Aleksandar |
2616 |
SRB |
4.5 |
15 |
GM Tiviakov Sergei |
2634 |
NED |
4.5 |
15 |
GM Laznicka Viktor |
2578 |
CZE |
4.5 |
17 |
GM Kokarev Dmitry |
2579 |
RUS |
4.5 |
18 |
GM Motylev Alexander |
2666 |
RUS |
4.5 |
19 |
GM Khalifman Alexander |
2628 |
RUS |
4.5 |
20 |
GM Grachev Boris |
2610 |
RUS |
4.5 |
21 |
GM Pavasovic Dusko |
2595 |
SLO |
4.5 |
22 |
GM Papaioannou Ioannis |
2566 |
GRE |
4.5 |
23 |
GM Popov Ivan |
2594 |
RUS |
4.5 |
24 |
GM Caruana Fabiano |
2620 |
ITA |
4.5 |
25 |
GM Vachier-Lagrave Maxime |
2632 |
FRA |
4.5 |
26 |
GM Lupulescu Constantin |
2558 |
ROU |
4.5 |
In the women's section Lithuanian IM Viktorija Cmilyte leads together with
IMs Anna Ushenina, Ukraine, and Ekaterina Kovalevskaya of Russia. Behind them
Top standings after six rounds (total 159 players)
1 |
IM Cmilyte Viktorija |
2466 |
LTU |
5.0 |
2 |
IM Ushenina Anna |
2474 |
UKR |
5.0 |
3 |
IM Kovalevskaya Ekaterina |
2421 |
RUS |
5.0 |
4 |
IM Mkrtchian Lilit |
2413 |
ARM |
4.5 |
5 |
GM Stefanova Antoaneta |
2538 |
BUL |
4.5 |
6 |
IM Peptan Corina-Isabela |
2415 |
ROU |
4.5 |
7 |
IM Muzychuk Anna |
2486 |
SLO |
4.5 |
8 |
GM Lahno Kateryna |
2479 |
UKR |
4.5 |
9 |
IM Danielian Elina |
2479 |
ARM |
4.5 |
10 |
WGM Zhukova Natalia |
2450 |
UKR |
4.5 |
11 |
GM Cramling Pia |
2539 |
SWE |
4.5 |
12 |
WIM Batsiashvili Nino |
2304 |
GEO |
4.5 |
13 |
IM Paehtz Elisabeth |
2449 |
GER |
4.5 |
14 |
WGM Pogonina Natalija |
2470 |
RUS |
4.5 |
15 |
IM Javakhishvili Lela |
2466 |
GEO |
4.5 |
16 |
WGM Golubenko Valentina |
2253 |
CRO |
4.5 |
Impressions from Plovdiv
By Diana Mihajlova

Veronika Minina (RUS) and WGM Anna Sharevich (BLR)

WGM Valentina Golubenko (CRO)

WIM Lilit Galojan (ARM)

GM Bartosz Socko and IM Monica Socko

Szymon Socko has just finished his meal. As long as he gets his chicken
nuggets he doesn’t mind accompanying his parents Polish GMs Monica and
Bartosz Socko on chess tournaments around the globe.

GM Petar Velikov with his protégé Alexander Monev

Twelve-year-old Alexander Monev is the youngest participant.
And he is the future Bulgarian star. Four times in a row he has won the first
place in the Bulgarian Individual Championship for boys and girls under 10 and
12 years. Last year in the World Youth Chess Championship in Antalya he got
the fourth place for boys under 12. He hopes to achieve a better result this
year in Vietnam. Alexander lives in Sofia and goes to a special mathematics
and physics school. His father points out: "Chess and mathematics –
that’s all he wants to do, all the time." Alexander trains four hours,
twice weekly, with GM Petar Velikov. Although he would like to play chess even
more, he likes mathematics as much and would not abandon his school where he
obtains only top marks.

Leila Dimitrova, Chief of the Press Centre

GM Ventzislav Inkiov (BUL), Chief of the Internet & Online
performance team. Ventzislav represented the Bulgarian team six times at the
Chess Olympiad. Now he has replaced his enviable chess career with Internet
chess programs and his chess web site.
At the current tournament he is responsible for the Bulletin and the on-line
games. He says:
"There are always problems at this type of big tournaments. But luckily,
and unbelievably, no major hiccups so far. Plovdiv has become a chess centre
in Bulgaria. The Plovdiv Chess School has produced many GMs including the
veterans Bobotsov, Tringov, Padevski and the currently active GM Kiril Georgiev.
In cooperation with the hotel Novotel, which provides excellent conditions,
it has been hosting GM tournaments for more than thirty years, since about
1975, including two Team Championships, in 1983 and 2003. I hope everything
will finish as it has started - on a high professional level."

The bulletin and on-line performance team at work
Srdja Dragashevic, President of the Chess Federation of Montenegro and
the Montenegrin chess legend GM Bozidar Ivanovic.

Beer and chess: IM Jovanka Houska (ENG) GM Peter Wells (ENG) and GM Gawain
Jones (ENG)

Just beer, no chessboard: GM Attila Czebe, WGM Anita Gara and GM Zoltan
Almasi
Plovdiv historical and contemporary
While the tournament is unfolding, let’s take a tour of Plovdiv, the
city host to the 9th European Individual Chess Championships. Situated along
the banks of the river Maritza, in the Southern/Central part of Bulgaria, Plovdiv
is the second largest city in the country. It is nicknamed ‘the city of
the seven hills’ because it is constructed on seven picturesque hills,
some which are 250 m. high.
Panorama of the city as seen from one of the hills
Built in the 12th century BC, Plovdiv is considered to be one of the first
cities in Europe, contemporary of Troy and Mycenae, and older than Rome, Carthage
or Constantinople. During the reign Philip II of Macedon, the father of Alexander
the Great, (4th century BC) it was called Philippopolis or the "City of
Philip".

Round turret from the acropolis fortress wall of Philippopolis (4-6 BC)
The ancient Amphitheatre, built by the Romans. It is the best preserved antiquity,
uncovered relatively late, only in the sixties. The incredible acoustics are
apparently of such quality that needs no additional sound system. It is an excellent
venue for concerts and theatre plays.
While wandering around the Old Town on the first day I was lucky to meet Agop
Srentz, a very knowledgeable history and culture enthusiast. Physicist by profession
and lecturer at the Physics department at the Plovdiv University, he became
my local guide for the morning. Here he is on the hill in front of the original
foundations of the first house, built 600 years BC. Agop is a living example
of the cultural and ethnic mixture that is Plovdiv. Armenian by birth, his predecessors
arrived in Plovdiv around 1915 escaping the Turkish oppression. Today in Plovdiv
living side by side we find Muslims, Christians, Jews and other religions that
arrived over centuries from various countries in the turbulent Eastern Europe
and the close Orient. The majority of the 350,000 inhabitants are orthodox Slavs
and speak Bulgarian – a Slav language that uses a Cyrillic alphabet.
During its 8000-year-old history many cultures have left a trace behind and
the mixture of Roman, Trace, Ottoman and traditional Bulgarian architectures
are still visible today. The 500 years of Ottoman rule has made however the
greatest impact.

My first impressions are captured from my balcony on the morning after my
arrival at the Plovdiv Guesthouse in the Old Town. A thick walled fence built
with bricks and covered with roof tiles encloses a stone paved courtyard. Such
a fence ("avlija" in Turkish) was a typical and obligatory part of
the architecture during the Ottoman Empire.

A small balcony is a usual feature as well as the tiny wood framed windows
covered from inside by neatly positioned white curtains.

The outside façade and ornamental frieze of the oldest church in Plovdiv,
St Constantine & Elena, dedicated to King Constantine and his mother Elena
who first spread the Christianity during the Byzantine times.

The bells of the same church still resound powerfully every day, at 8 a.m.
on the dot. As it is situated next to my hotel I have no option but to start
my day early, which is proving quite useful.

The local priest gracing the very old, narrow, cobblestone-paved streets

Precious space is gained by protruding wall and window extensions that hang
over the narrow street.

Streets are sometimes so narrow one can look inside the opposite side neighbours’
homes. Windows are positioned in a lateral zigzag, which makes easier for the
sunlight to reach them.

In 1833 the French poet Alfonse Lamartine stayed in this house. He made the
stopover in Plovdiv on his journey to the Orient, and he wrote one of the first
travel books Voyage en Orient. The owner of the house was a rich Greek
merchant and the town was under a Turkish government. The Bulgarians from Plovdiv
heard of the poet’s presence in their town and his intentions to present
some facts to the West and got worried that he might get things wrong. Dressed
in their national costumes they staged a demonstration in front of the house.
They wanted to make a simple statement: this is a Bulgarian town where Bulgarians
– Christian people – live. The message did not escape the poet’s
observant mind, and he reported the situation correctly in what was to be the
first journalistic report to the west.

The inhabitants of Plovdiv managed to obtain the first glimpse of democracy
in 1868, when the sultan Abdul Aziz gave in and allowed children in this school
to learn in both Turkish and Bulgarian languages. The decree was written in
both languages and engraved on adjacent wall plaques. Today it is the Academy
of Music.

Houses are often decorated with ornamental frescoes. Many of them are today
beautifully and freshly restored.

If not decorative ornamentations than the facades are painted in simple geometric
forms; never in plain monochromes.

The colours are usually bright red or pink magenta, orange or golden yellow.

Late in the night the Old Town gets transformed into a mysteriously peaceful
village. Streets are almost completely deserted and there are hardly any street
lights. Occasional a pale brightness coming from homes or restaurant windows.
Treading carefully on the cobblestone pavements one is transported back into
olden times. Dogs start barking from behind heavy portals and wall-fences as
soon as you come close by. Charmingly spooky.
About
the author
Diana Mihajlova is a chess player and artist who has been exhibiting internationally
(under the name Yana Mitra) since 1988. She was born in Macedonia (former Yugoslavia).
A linguist by profession she has started her working career as a university
lecturer, which took her to extensive studying and working sojourns in various
countries around the world. In 1989 after finishing a three-year lecturing contract
in Perth, Australia, she decided to abandon her academic career and to dedicate
herself to a full-time painting while still free-lancing in the languages field.
She first started exhibiting while still in Australia where after winning some
important national art prizes her work received a quick recognition and was
included in important exhibitions and collections. After her return to Europe
she continued her painting career by exhibiting in galleries in Paris, where
she lived the following two years. Since 1993 she settled in London where she
currently lives and works. You can see her paintings at the Yana
Mitra web site.